Boardwalk fire dashes post-Sandy hopes on Jersey Shore

The devastation wrought by a monstrous fire that raged across an iconic Jersey Shore boardwalk was like a punch in the gut to many locals and officials who just four months ago celebrated the reopening of two beach communities ravaged by Superstorm Sandy.

As some 400 firefighters on Thursday battled the massive wind-whipped blaze, which forceful gusts of up to 40 mph had pushed from Seaside Park to neighboring Seaside Heights, business owner Tim Hussey said he was "bewildered" by the disastrous turn of events.

"We've been through a storm and now a fire," Hussey, the owner of Kupper's French Fries, told NBC News. "Is this some type of message?"

Daniel Shauger, manager at the heavily damaged Funtown Arcade, stands at the scene of a massive fire that destroyed dozens of businesses along an iconic Jersey shore boardwalk on September 13, 2013 in Seaside Heights, New Jersey.

The inferno, which sparked at an ice cream shop around 2:30 p.m. and rapidly gobbled up around 50 businesses, turned the area into a hellish tinderbox.

That sentiment was common among locals dumbfounded by another blow to the community.

"I think this area has had enough of what nature and acts of God can cause," said John Condit, who has been coming to the shore for 15 years.

"I can't believe this is happening," Seaside Park Councilwoman Nancy Koury told The Associated Press as she watched the fierce flames tear through boardwalk buildings. "Our small business-people went through so much in the storm to get ready for summer and stay open all summer, and now it's all gone. I just can't believe it."

Christie and other officials declined to "speculate" on a cause for the fire, saying that their primary focus Thursday evening was stamping out the inferno.

"As soon as this is over, we'll pick ourselves up, we'll dust ourselves off and we'll get back to work," he said.

No one was seriously injured, although several firefighters did suffer from heat exhaustion and smoke inhalation, officials said

Kohr's Brothers, the ice cream shop where the blaze is believed to have begun, first opened on the boardwalk in Coney Island in 1919, according to NBCPhiladelphia.com.

It's since expanded up and down the East Coast in 10 states and is a well-known ice cream shop at the Jersey Shore.

—By NBC News Daniel Arkin and Alexandra Moe, with AP

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